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Cars in shopping centres - Printable Version +- 306oc - Peugeot 306 Owners Club & Forum (https://www.306oc.co.uk/forum) +-- Forum: General (https://www.306oc.co.uk/forum/forumdisplay.php?fid=6) +--- Forum: The Couch (https://www.306oc.co.uk/forum/forumdisplay.php?fid=7) +--- Thread: Cars in shopping centres (/showthread.php?tid=18380) Pages:
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RE: Cars in shopping centres - Niall - 27-10-2013 Yeah i know you can't be there for them 24/7. Maybe i just see it different because people round here seem to be the sort that only have a baby because they want a free house hence don't give a shit what their kids do. RE: Cars in shopping centres - cwspellowe - 27-10-2013 You'll find a lot of parents are like that tbh. Nothing you can do about it, but smart comments don't help the situation because if the situation arose because the parent didn't give a shit about their kid, a game of one-upmanship wouldn't change anything apart from make you feel smug about what you said. RE: Cars in shopping centres - Dum-Dum - 27-10-2013 Suppose there's 2 ways of looking at it. Either a) kids don't realise that they'll get hurt but one pretty effective way of them learning what hurts is letting them run into things willy nilly or b) I don't remember ever running into a trolley but I know my mum kept me in the trolley or on a lead so that she could look after me and taught me why RE: Cars in shopping centres - cwspellowe - 27-10-2013 You were kept on a lead? ![]() RE: Cars in shopping centres - Niall - 27-10-2013 (27-10-2013, 10:10 PM)Dum-Dum Wrote: Suppose there's 2 ways of looking at it. Why do i have an image of Dumdum as a child (well 16) literally with a dog collar and retractable lead over the park with his mum! RE: Cars in shopping centres - Connor - 27-10-2013 He shouldn't have been let off it... RE: Cars in shopping centres - Dum-Dum - 27-10-2013 You know what i mean, reins, same shit really. Think mum got f*cked off when i realised that shed hold them up if I fell over so i didnt hit the floor so I could run and swing in them. RE: Cars in shopping centres - cwspellowe - 27-10-2013 Well i'm f*cked as far as parent of the year award goes then. Phoenix has never ever been in reins, he must be a right little shit. Forgot i was raising an animal, not a person. RE: Cars in shopping centres - Niall - 27-10-2013 Hope you put a muzzle on him when he's in public. Thats just irresponsible if you don't! RE: Cars in shopping centres - cwspellowe - 27-10-2013 (27-10-2013, 10:20 PM)Niall Wrote: Hope you put a muzzle on him when he's in public. Thats just irresponsible if you don't! f*ck, are you trying to make me feel even shitter right now? I'm already having to reevaluate the last three and a half years, i don't need a shopping list too RE: Cars in shopping centres - Niall - 27-10-2013 Sorry dude but this is all part of buying a child Clicky RE: Cars in shopping centres - Dum-Dum - 27-10-2013 Nah put the fucker in a cage when you go shopping. You know for his safety and shit. That said however much you dislike this good parenting is alot like training an animal RE: Cars in shopping centres - cwspellowe - 27-10-2013 (27-10-2013, 10:26 PM)Dum-Dum Wrote: good parenting is alot like training an animal ![]() God you come out with some retarded stuff sometimes. Good parenting is where you instill the knowledge and confidence in the child to give them the ability to make social decisions with the conscious knowledge of the likely repercussions of their actions and the ability to distinguish between socailly and lawfully perceived "right and wrong". Your main priority is to make them conscious and understanding of their surroundings and environment and instill the survival instincts they need to one day fend for themselves and pass their knowledge and experiences onto their children in future. Not teaching the child to sit down for a f*cking biscuit. RE: Cars in shopping centres - vlj - 27-10-2013 (27-10-2013, 10:35 PM)cwspellowe Wrote:(27-10-2013, 10:26 PM)Dum-Dum Wrote: good parenting is alot like training an animal This is getting a bit deep for a Sunday evening, how the f*ck have we got here from cars being displayed in malls ![]() RE: Cars in shopping centres - Dum-Dum - 27-10-2013 Child is good, child get sweets Dog is good, dog gets treats. Child is bad, child sits on naughty step or goes to room Dog is bad, bog sits in its bed or goes out to garden Child needs to learn something you stick with child till they learn it then praise them when they do Dog needs to learn something you stick telling the dog to sit till it gets it then praise it when it does it Child cant be trusted not to run into traffic on the road you keep it on reigns Dog cant be trusted not to run into traffic on the road you keep it on a lead An undesirable boy tries f*cking your daughter scare him off An undesirable dog tries f*cking your bitch you scare him off I could go on but I feel I've proved my point. Its all positive reinforcement (well with a little bit of negative reinforcement and psychological bullying where appropriate) RE: Cars in shopping centres - cwspellowe - 27-10-2013 (27-10-2013, 10:46 PM)Dum-Dum Wrote: Child is good, child get sweets You've not really proved your point at all, you've proved you can teach a child a Pavlovian response just like you can teach a dog. There's so many other social situations that simply aren't relevant to animals that your theory is flawed and completely invalid. You teach a dog how to respond to a given stimulus. You don't teach it to understand WHY it should respond that way, the moral of the story and the short and long term repercussions of its actions. You don't teach it to develop hand eye coordination, or encourage imagination and creativity. You don't teach it how to overcome emotional challenges, you don't explain why something has upset or what its choices are going forward. If you raised a child like that, you wouldn't make a good human being. You'd make a pet. The fact you seem to think raising a child on reins and treating it like an animal makes you a good parent just goes to show you never developed the aforementioned ability to think for yourself (presumably because you were too busy being dragged about on your own reins and "being a good boy" and I genuinely feel sorry for any child bestowed upon you. Re: Cars in shopping centres - THE_Liam - 28-10-2013 Are you two actually having an in-depth discussion about parenting? Stop the world, I want to get off. RE: Cars in shopping centres - n0v0s - 28-10-2013 ![]() ![]() ![]() RE: Cars in shopping centres - Poodle - 29-10-2013 (28-10-2013, 07:03 AM)THE_Liam Wrote: Are you two actually having an in-depth discussion about parenting? Stop the world, I want to get off. ![]() Hang on, i'm coming with you. |